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Decision on US approval of J&J vaccine nears

FILE – This Dec. 2, 2020 photo provided by Johnson & Johnson shows vials of the Janssen COVID-19 vaccine in the United States. (Johnson & Johnson via AP)

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WASHINGTON (NewsNation Now) — A group of independent advisers to the Food and Drug Administration are meeting Friday to debate whether to recommend Johnson & Johnson’s single-dose vaccine for emergency use in the U.S.

The group will gather virtually to review evidence, starting at 9 a.m. EST.

Once they send their recommendation to the FDA, the agency is expected to make a decision on authorizing the one-shot vaccine within the coming days. President Joe Biden said the promise of a third vaccine receiving approval could come as soon as this weekend.

Earlier this week, FDA scientists cleared a path for emergency use approval, determining that Johnson & Johnson’s shot is safe. Researchers confirmed that the vaccine overall is about 66% effective at preventing moderate to severe COVID-19, and about 85% effective against the most serious illness. 

The analysis is just one step in the FDA’s evaluation, and it’ll be discussed at the meeting of independent experts Friday.

The COVID-19 death toll in the U.S. topped 500,000 this week, and the vaccination drive has been slower than hoped, hampered by logistical and weather delays. So far, about 44.5 million Americans have received at least one dose of vaccine made by Pfizer or Moderna, and nearly 20 million of them have received the second dose required for full protection.

Tests showed the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines were 95% effective at protection against symptomatic COVID-19.

Dr. Paul Offit, a vaccine expert at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, is part of the FDA advisory panel that will scrutinize the J&J data on Friday and cautions that none of the vaccines have been directly compared.

All of the world’s COVID-19 vaccines have been tested differently, making comparisons nearly impossible. 

Still, Offit was encouraged that one dose of the J&J vaccine appears as good at preventing serious illness as its two-dose competitors.

“This is a vaccine to prevent you from going to the hospital and dying at a level that’s certainly comparable” to the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines, he said.

J&J tested its single-dose option in 44,000 adults in the U.S., Latin America and South Africa. Different mutated versions of the virus are circulating in different countries, and the FDA analysis cautioned that it’s not clear how well the vaccine works against each variant. But J&J previously announced that the vaccine worked better in the U.S. — 72% effective against moderate to severe COVID-19, compared with 66% in Latin America and 57% in South Africa.

South Africa recently began giving the J&J vaccine to front-line health workers on a test basis after deciding that a vaccine from rival AstraZeneca had not shown strong enough study results against the particularly concerning variant spreading there.

Across all countries, the analysis of the J&J vaccine showed protection began to emerge about 14 days after vaccination. But by 28 days after vaccination, there were no hospitalizations or deaths in the vaccinated group compared with 16 hospitalizations and seven deaths in study recipients who received a dummy shot.

The FDA said effectiveness and safety were consistent across racial groups, including Black and Latino participants.

J&J has another large study underway to see if a second dose of its vaccine works better, raising the prospect that countries could eventually add a booster if one turned out to be warranted.

Like other COVID-19 vaccines, the main side effects of the J&J shot are pain at the injection site and flu-like fever, fatigue and headache. No study participant experienced the severe allergic reaction, called anaphylaxis, that is a rare risk of some other COVID-19 shots, although one experienced a less serious reaction.

The FDA said there were no serious side effects linked to the vaccine so far, although it recommended further monitoring for blood clots. In the study, those were reported in about 15 vaccine recipients and 10 placebo recipients, not enough of a difference to tell if the vaccine played any role.

If the FDA clears the J&J shot for U.S. use, it will not boost vaccine supplies significantly right away. Only a few million doses are expected to be ready for shipping in the first week. J&J told Congress this week that it expected to provide 20 million doses by the end of March and 100 million by summer.

“We have a plan to roll it out as quickly as Johnson & Johnson can make it,” Biden said Thursday.

The Associated Press contributed to this report. All reporting by Lauran Neergaard and Matthew Perrone.

Coronavirus Vaccine

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